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Is the sand in Panama City Beach Natural?

The sand is made up mainly of 99% pure silica quartz washed down from the mountains by the Apalachicola River. The quartz is ground to a perfect oval in each grain of sand. It is so fine in texture, it literally “squeaks” under your toes as you walk!



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Sand forms when rocks break down from weathering and eroding over thousands and even millions of years. Rocks take time to decompose, especially quartz (silica) and feldspar. Often starting thousands of miles from the ocean, rocks slowly travel down rivers and streams, constantly breaking down along the way.

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The pure white, snow-like sand along Northwest Florida beaches is purely ground quartz mineral.

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Many of the Florida Keys' beaches are manmade, or are just a layer of sand over a sliver of limestone. The north is almost always cooler than south, something to remember in both summer and winter.

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The unique sand of the beaches in the Destin area is among the whitest and most homogenous of the world. Consisting of small quartz particles, this sand came from a process involving the Appalachian Mountains and the Apalachicola River 20,000 years ago.

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Here is a list of the ten dirtiest beaches in the world.
  • 8 Serendipity Beach, Cambodia.
  • 7 Guanabara Bay, Brazil.
  • 6 Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia.
  • 5 Juhu Beach, India.
  • 4 Kuta Beach, Indonesia.
  • 3 Kamilo Beach, Hawaii, USA.
  • 2 Maya Bay, Thailand.
  • 1 Phu Quoc, Vietnam.


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The town and island of Nantucket ranked first on the list — by far — for most-expensive beach destination in the world, with an average price of $694 per night for the least-expensive double room, the site found. TravelMag researchers said they investigated every destination worldwide with at least one beach.

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Whitehaven Beach, Whitsunday Island, Australia Whitehaven Beach is consistently ranked as the world's best beach, and with good reason: It's almost surreally beautiful. Besides its crystal clear waters, it's known for its white sand, consisting of 98% pure silica which gives it a bright white color.

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Florida also has a history of “beach nourishment” projects in which sand (brought from inland) is spread onto beaches to replenish the sand lost to erosion. According to a database of 2,000 beach nourishment projects, 500 of them have spread 293 million cubic yards of sand at a price of $2.4 billion dollars.

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Over a period of a few days or weeks, the sun will bleach the sand until it's gradually closer to the color people are used to seeing.

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